The Freudian Revolution Chapter 33 The Freudian Revolution
Psychoanalysis = the talking cure
The Tripartite Psyche The id—the repository of the libido. Demanding swift satisfaction and fulfillment of biological desires, it is lawless, asocial, amoral. The ego—making the id’s energies nondestructive by postponing them or diverting them into socially acceptable actions. The superego—similar to one’s conscience, operating according to the morality principle. (parents, institutions) (Dobie 51)
Erogenous 性感 Zone The oral stage—associated with the drive to incorporate objects The anal stage---The anal stage is sadistic, in that the child derives erotic pleasure from expulsion and destruction; but it is also connected with the desire for retention and possessive control, as the child learns a new form of mastery and a manipulation of the wishes of others through the ‘granting’ or withholding of the faeces. The phallic stage---only the male organ is recognized. (Eagleton 153)
Fixation 固戀 When one’s desire is tied to an object of desire connected to an earlier phase in one’s psychosexual development. Example: a fixation on oral pleasure, which Freud would see as “stuck” at the oral phase, even though other aspects of one’s development may have proceeded normally. (Felluga)
Regression When normally functioning desire meets with powerful external obstacles, which prevent satisfaction of those desires, the subject sometimes regresses to an earlier phase in normal psychosexual development. (Felluga)
Regression Example 1: a normally functioning woman is dumped by her boyfriend and starts over-eating (thus regressing to the oral phase).
Regression Example 2: the neurotic begins over-eating; the pervert gives up men and becomes a lesbian (a sexual identity that Freud saw as perversion, though many have since critiqued him on this point). (Felluga)
The Oedipus Complex The boy’s close involvement with his mother’s body leads him to an unconscious desire for sexual union with her. What persuades the boy-child to abandon his incestuous desire for the mother is the father’s threat of castration.
The Oedipus Complex This threat need not necessarily be spoken; but the boy, in perceiving that the girl is herself ‘castrated’, begins to imagine this as a punishment which might be visited upon himself. He thus represses his incestuous desire in anxious resignation, adjusts himself to the ‘reality principle’ . . . . The boy makes peace with his father, identifies with him, and is thus introduce into the symbolic role of manhood. (Eagleton 155-156)
The Oedipus Complex It is the point at which we are produced and constituted as subjects. It signals the transition from the pleasure principle to the reality principle, form the enclosure of the family to society at large, since we turn from incest to extra-familial relations; and from Nature to Culture. (Eagleton 156)
The Oedipus Complex The human subject who emerges from the Oedipal process is a split subject, torn precariously between conscious and unconscious; and the unconscious can always return to plague it (Eagleton 156).
Dreams The “royal road” to the unconscious is dreams. Dreams allow us one of our privileged glimpses of the unconscious at work (Eagleton, 157).
Neurosis We may have certain unconscious desires which will not be denied, but which dare not find practical outlet either; in this situation, the desire forces its way in from the unconscious, the ego blocks it off defensively, and the result of this internal conflict is what we call neurosis.
Neurosis The patient begins to develop symptoms which. . . at once protect against the unconscious desire and covertly express it. Such neuroses may be obsessional (having to touch every lamp-post on the street), hysterical (developing a paralyzed arm for no good organic reason), or phobic (being unreasonably afraid of open spaces or certain animals). (Eagleton 158)
Psychosis The link between the ego and the external world is ruptured, and the unconscious begins to build up an alternative, delusional reality. The psychotic, in other words, has lost contact with reality at key points, as in paranoia and schizophrenia.
Art & Literature Literature and the other arts, like dreams and neurotic symptoms, consist of the imagined, or fantasied, fulfillment of wishes that are either denied by reality or are prohibited by the social standards of morality and propriety. (Abrams 248)
Art & Literature Manifest content Latent content The disguised fantasies that are evident to consciousness Latent content The unconscious wishes
Art & Literature What distinguishes artists from the patently neurotic personality is sublimation昇華.
Art & Literature The artists possess an ability to shift the instinctual drive from their original sexual goals to nonsexual ‘higher’ goals. They could elaborate fantasied wish-fulfillments into the manifest features of a work of art in a way that conceals or deletes their merely personal elements, and so makes them capable of satisfying the unconscious desires of other people.
Psychoanalyst The chief enterprise of the psychoanalyst as a therapist, is to reveal the true content, and thereby to explain the effect on the reader, of a literary work by translating its manifest elements into the latent, unconscious determinants that constitute their suppressed meanings. (Abrams 249)
References Abrams, M. H. A Glossary of Literary Terms. 7th ed. Harcourt Brace, 1999. Eagleton, Terry. Literary Theory. U of Minnesota, 1983. Felluga, Dino. http://www.purdue.edu/guidetotheory/psychoanalysis
Impact of New Psychology
Literature Proust Kafka Joyce
Visual Arts Expressionism Metaphysical art and fantasy Dadaism Surrealism
Expressionism Munch Kirchner
Munch, The Scream, 1893
Munch, Madonna, 1895
Munch, Puberty, 1895
Munch <Self Portrait in Hell> 1893
Kirchner, Berlin Street Scene, 1913
Metaphysical Art and Fantasy De Chirico Chagall
De Chirico, Mystery and Melancholy of a Street, 1914
De Chirico, The Enigma of the Hour, 1912
De Chirico, The Nostalgia of the Infinite, 1913-14 “We experience the most unforgettable moments when certain aspects of the world . . . suddenly confront us with the revelation of mysteries lying all the time within our reach, which we cannot see . . . .”
Chagall, Green Violinist, 1923-24
Chagall, I and the Village, 1911
Dada "Dada had no unified formal characteristics as have other styles“. . .it is characterized only by its "destruction of all artistic forms . . . a raging anti, anti, anti" (Richter). Duchamp
“I wanted to get away from the physical aspect of painting, I was much more interested in re-creating ideas in painting. For me the title was very important. . . . I wanted to put painting once again at the service of the mind.” Marcel Duchamp
Duchamp, Bicycle Wheel, 1913/1964
Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q, (She’s hot in the tail.) 1918
Duchamp, Fountain, 1917
Surrealism “psychic automatism, in its pure state” André Breton
Surrealism: Two Trends Abstract Surrealism (Automatism) Picasso, Miro, and Klee Visionary Surrealism Magritte, Dali
Automatism the automatic way in which the images of the subconscious reach the consciousness. These images should not be burdened with "meaning.“ believe that lack of form was a way to rebel against them Miro, Pollock, de Kooning http://www.bway.net/~monique/history.htm
Picasso, Seated Woman, 1927
Miro, The Tilled Field
Miro, Person Throwing a Stone at a Bird, 1926
Miro, Dog Barking at the Moon
Klee, The Gold Fish, 1925
Klee, Embrace
Klee, Angelus Novus
Visionary Surrealism saw academic discipline and form as the means to represent the images of the subconscious with veracity hoped to find a way to follow the images of the subconscious until the consciousness could understand their meaning. De Chirico, Dali, Magritte http://www.bway.net/~monique/history.htm
Magritte, The Treason of Pictures, 1929
Magritte, This Is Not An Apple, 1964
Magritte, The Lovers, 1928
Magritte, Black Magic, 1933
Magritte, The Therapist, 1937
Magritte, Time Transfixed, 1938
Magritte, Collective Invention, 1934
Magritte, Song of Love, 1964
Magritte, Clairvoyance (Self-portrait), 1936
Magritte, Son of Man, 1964
Dali, The Persistence of Memory, 1931
Dali, Sleep, 1937
Women Surrealists: Georgia O’Keeffe Frida Kahlo
O’Keeffe, Jack-in-the-Pulpit No.V, 1930
O’Keeffe, Yellow Calla, 1926
O’Keeffe, Poppy, 1927
O’Keeffe, Cow’s Skull: with Calico Roses, 1931 I painted my cow's head because I liked it and in its way it was a symbol of the best part of America I had found.
Kahlo, Self-Portrait between the Borderline of Mexico and the United States, 1932
Frida Kahlo, The Two Fridas, 1939
The End